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Mike Pinder, Founding Keyboardist of the Moody Blues, Dies at 82

His expertise on the electromechanical Mellotron helped define the band’s progressive sound in the 1960s and ’70s on albums like…

Can Biden Revive the Fortunes of American Workers?

Last week, employees at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., voted by almost three to one to join the United…

Why Are We Gambling With America’s Future?

Over the past few decades, in a surge of bipartisan national self-confidence, the federal government has borrowed a lot of…

Peter Schey, Tenacious Lawyer Who Defended Migrant Rights, Dies at 77

He won the right to services like school and health care for people illegally crossing the border into the U.S.…

Penny Simkin, ‘Mother of the Doula Movement,’ Dies at 85

As a childbirth educator and maternal advocate, she promoted a profession that provides comfort to women giving birth and offers…

The Teen Trend of Sexual Choking

More from our inbox: Emergency Abortions and the Supreme CourtOur Father, Who Led Columbia, Would Be Saddened TodayHiring DiscriminationTrump’s Own…

Disney Scrapped Their Show. An Unlikely Champion Saved It.

Canceled by Disney before it even aired, “The Spiderwick Chronicles” found a new home at Roku and has so far…

‘Terrestrial Verses’ Review: Sitting in the Bureaucrat’s Seat

Ordinary Iranians face a maze of byzantine rules and small indignities in this series of gripping vignettes.

A Wanderer, Ravel and Suzanne Farrell: Life Is Good at City Ballet

The spring season at New York City Ballet opened with an all-Balanchine program and a vintage miniature from 1975: “Errante,”…

How Postwar Paris Changed the Expat Artists

An exhibition at the Grey Art Museum explores the fervid postwar scene in Paris, where Ellsworth Kelly, Joan Mitchell and…

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